Max said:I have a Forster, Redding and Wilson that I use for casual benchrest in .222 Rem and 6mm BR. The fit of the seating stem on the Redding is better than the Forster and runout is also better. The Wilson however is my favourite and produces the straightest ammo but must be used with an arbor press.
The Wilson however is my favourite and produces the straightest ammo but must be used with an arbor press.
kelbro said:Can you convert a regular Forster Bench Rest seater to a mic top like you can with a Redding?
kelbro said:Can you convert a regular Forster Bench Rest seater to a mic top like you can with a Redding?
kelbro said:Can you convert a regular Forster Bench Rest seater to a mic top like you can with a Redding?
amlevin said:I use a Forster BR seater die but for some reason it leaves a nasty scrape mark on the side of the bullet. The scrape extends up from the case about 1/4" on finished cartridges.
Any others with ideas on what causes this. Can't find any rough spots in the die.
FWIW, I too get nice low runout readings on finished rounds, less than .001" on average. However, I also have a Custom Grade New Dimension Hornady seater die that does exactly the same. Difference is that the Hornady die came in a set that cost less than the single Forster die (both w/o micrometer adjust).
All my "fixed seater plug" seating dies are going "bye-bye".